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close this bookHealth and Environment in Sustainable Development - Five years after the Earth Summit (WHO, 1997, 258 pages)
View the document(introductory text...)
View the documentMessage from the Director-General
View the documentAbout this book
View the documentAbbreviations and acronyms
View the documentUnits of measurements
close this folderChapter 1: A new perspective on health
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View the document1.1 How are we doing?
View the document1.2. Five years since the Earth Summit
View the document1.3 Environmental threats to human health
View the document1.4 A health-and-environment cause - effect framework
View the document1.5 Relevant information for derision-making and action
View the document1.6 Finding solutions to environmental health problems
View the document1.7 Supportive environments for health
View the document1.8 Power and participation for both men and women
View the document1.9 Intersectoral actions for a healthy environment
View the document1.10 Health for All: the way ahead
close this folderChapter 2: Driving forces behind current health-and-environment trends
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View the document2.1 The driving forces concept
close this folder2.2 Population dynamics
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View the document2.2.1 Population growth and its relation to environment
View the document2.2.2 Population structure and changing health concerns
View the document2.2.3 Population movement: increasing numbers
close this folder2.3 Urbanization
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View the document2.3.1 Urban growth: scale and pace
View the document2.3.2 Growth of urban slums
close this folder2.4 Poverty and inequity
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View the document2.4.1 The poverty-environmental degradation link
View the document2.4.2 Displaced and impoverished groups
View the document2.4.3 Status of women: poverty, patriarchy and diminishing resources
close this folder2.5 Science and technology
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View the document2.5.1 Research for health and environment
View the document2.5.2 Appropriate technology
View the document2.5.3 Technology transfer, adaptation and redesign
View the document2.5.4 Information and communication technology
close this folder2.6 Consumption and production patterns
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View the document2.6.1 Changes in diet environmental implications
View the document2.6.2 Consumption of raw materials and persistent chemicals
View the document2.6.3 Burning of fossil fuels
close this folder2.7 Economic development
View the document2.7.1 Economic development as a driving force
View the document2.7.2 Economic development trends and environmental hazards
View the document2.7.3 Trade development
View the document2.7.4 Economic resources for health-and-environment protection
View the document2.8 The foundations of sustainability
close this folderChapter 3: Major human activities affecting environmental quality
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View the document3.1 How driving forces create environmental pressures
close this folder3.2 Household wastes
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View the document3.2.1 Human excrete: little or no treatment
View the document3.2.2 Solid wastes from households: levels increasing
close this folder3.3 Fresh water
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View the document3.3.1 Global freshwater resources: limited, uneven and subject to pressure
View the document3.3.2 Global freshwater use: demand inequity
View the document3.3.3 Freshwater scarcity: of growing proportions
View the document3.3.4 Freshwater pollution: a new problem every decade
View the document3.3.5 The marine environment: land-based pressures
View the document3.3.6 Hydrology and aquatic environments: integrated planning needed
close this folder3.4 Land use and agricultural development
View the document3.4.1 Competition for land
View the document3.4.2 Agricultural development and environmental changes
View the document3.4.3 Toil degradation: sources and effects
close this folder3.5 Industrialization: improved prospects and adverse consequences
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View the document3.5.1 Emissions, waste and natural resource use
View the document3.5.2 Industrial accidents and health-and-environment impacts
View the document3.5.3 Industrial activity trends
View the document3.5.4 Industry and sustainable development: evolving together
close this folder3.6 Energy
View the document3.6.1 Energy dependency
View the document3.6.2 Household use of biomass and coal: impairing indoor air quality
View the document3.6.3 Pollution from use of fossil fuels in power stations, industry and transport
View the document3.6.4 Hydropower: population dislocation and ecological change
View the document3.6.5 Nuclear energy: maintained vigilance needed
View the document3.7 Considerable threats to environmental quality and health
close this folderChapter 4: Poor environmental quality, exposures and risks
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View the document4.1 The human dimension to environmental quality
close this folder4.2 Air pollution
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View the document4.2.1 Urban ambient air quality: often poor
View the document4.2.2 Indoor air pollution: "rule of one thousand"
View the document4.2.3 Human exposures to particulate air pollution
View the document4.2.4 Health risks of air pollution
View the document4.2.5 Environmental tobacco smoke: on the increase
View the document4.2.6 Ionizing radiation: natural and human-caused exposure
View the document4.2.7 Air quality management: many factors
close this folder4.3 Household wastes
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View the document4.3.1 Health risks of inappropriate excrete disposal
View the document4.3.2 Health risks of solid waste
close this folder4.4 Water
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View the document4.4.1 Water supply access and equity
View the document4.4.2 Sustainability of water supply and sanitation services
View the document4.4.3 Environmental health risks of water pollution
View the document4.4.4 Chemicals in drinking- water
View the document4.4.5 Public health risks from recreational use of water
View the document4.4.6 Water-related vector-borne diseases
close this folder4.5 Food
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View the document4.5.1 Biological hazards in food
View the document4.5.2 Chemical and radioactive hazards in food
View the document4.6 Soil
close this folder4.7 Housing
View the document4.7.1 The importance of housing for health
View the document4.7.2 Extent of the problem
View the document4.7.3 Crowding
View the document4.7.4 Accidents and injuries
View the document4.7.5 Building materials and contructionrelated problems
View the document4.7.6 Indoor air pollution
View the document4.7.7 Pests
close this folder4.8 The workplace
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View the document4.8.1 The workplace environment and economic development
View the document4.8.2 Workplace exposures
View the document4.3.3 Occupational health impacts
close this folder4.9 The global environment
View the document4.9.1 From local pressures to global impacts
View the document4.9.2 Climate change
View the document4.9.3 Stratospheric ozone depletion and its health effects
View the document4.9.4 Transboundary air pollution and movement of hazardous waste
View the document4.9.5 Dealiag with global environmental health problems
close this folder4.10 Combined exposures from a variety of sources
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View the document4.10.1 The concept of total human exposure
View the document4.10.2 The example of lead
View the document4.11 Multiple challenges for health protection
close this folderChapter 5: Health conditions in an environmental context
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View the document5.1 Estimating the burden of disease
close this folder5.2 Acute respiratory infections
View the document5.2.1 One of the greatest threats to child health
View the document5.2.2 Historical trends and risk factors
View the document5.2.3 Current control strategies
close this folder5.3 Diarrhoeal diseases
View the document5.3.1 The devastating results of poor sanitation
View the document5.3.2 The example of cholera
View the document5.3.3 Impact of interventions
close this folder5.4 Vaccine-preventable infections diseases
View the document5.4.1 When immunization helps stop environmental transmission
View the document5.4.2 Measles
View the document5.4.3 Neonatal tetanus
View the document5.4.4 Poliomyelitis
View the document5.4.5 Other vaccine-preventable diseases
close this folder5.5 Malaria, other tropical vector-borne diseases, and newly-emerging diseases
View the document5.5.1 Debilitating diseases related to climate and ecological conditions
View the document5.5.2 Malaria
View the document5.5.3 Other vector-borne diseases
View the document5.5.4 Emerging infectious diseases: surveillance needed
close this folder5.6 Injuries and poisonings
View the document5.6.1 Major causes of ill health in both children and adults
View the document5.6.2 Road-traffic accidents: a major health problem
View the document5.6.3 Occupational accidents: considerable under-reporting
View the document5.6.4 Poisonings: few reliable data
View the document5.6.5 Intentional injuries: violence
close this folder5.7 Mental health conditions
View the document5.7.1 A growing health concern
View the document5.7.2 Effects of chemical and physical factors
View the document5.7.3 Effects of psychosocial factors
close this folder5.8 Cardiovascular diseases
View the document5.8.1 The most common cause of death
View the document5.8.2 Social and lifestyle risk factors
View the document5.8.3 Physical environmental risk factors
close this folder5.9 Cancer
View the document5.9.1 Diseases of concern at all levels of development
View the document5.9.2 Occupational cancer
View the document5.9.3 Infectious agents
View the document5.9.4 Air pollution
View the document5.9.5 Water pollution and contaminated food
View the document5.9.6 Ionizing radiation
View the document5.9.7 Non-ionizing radiation
View the document5.9.8 Environmental tobacco smoke: acute and chronic effects
close this folder5.10 Chronic respiratory diseases
View the document5.10.1 The impacts of inhaling polluted air
View the document5.10.2 Occupational respiratory diseases
close this folder5.11 Other diseases
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View the document5.11.1 Allergies
View the document5.11.2 Reproductive health problems
View the document5.12 Special features of occupational diseases and injuries
View the document5.13 Environmental factors and the global burden of disease
close this folderChapter 6: Integrated policies, strategies and actions: progress since the earth summit
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close this folder6.1 The need for an integrated framework
View the document6.1.1 Changing perspectives in health
View the document6.1.2 New planning frameworks
View the document6.1.3 New health information systems
close this folder6.2 International initiatives
View the document6.2.1 Involvement of the UN system: institutional arrangements
View the document6.2.2 Selected cooperative initiatives
close this folder6.3 A stronger health focus in national planning for sustainable development
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View the document6.3.1 Regional and country initiatives
close this folder6.4 A stronger health focus in local planning for sustainable development
View the document6.4.1 Relevance at local level
View the document6.4.2 Focus on urban areas
View the document6.4.3 Focus on rural areas
View the document6.4.4 Focus on islands
View the document6.5 Integrated planning initiatives: successes and achievements
View the document6.6 Renewing "Health for All"
View the documentChapter 7: Conclusions
View the documentGlossary
View the documentReferences
View the documentAnnex A: Country groupings by development and by geographic region
View the documentAnnex B: Countries providing data for WHO/UNICEF (1996a)
View the documentEnvironmental health contact points in WHO Regional Offices and WHO Environmental Health Regional Technical Centres

About this book

Five years have passed since the Earth Summit, the important United Nations Conference on Environment and Development which took place in Rio de Janeiro. A milestone has thus been reached on the path towards sustainable development. However, new directions in development can take years, if not decades, to gain a foothold. We have therefore chosen to analyse trends pertaining to health-and-environment issues from the early 1970s - the era of the first United Nations Conference on the Human Environment, held in Stockholm - up to the present, and to make projections from the present until the year 2020. In so doing we are able to provide a fifty-year perspective on health and environment within the context of social and economic development.

Specifically, this book demonstrates that environmental quality is crucial for human health. It does this in two ways: by describing the adverse health effects of environmental hazards and by showing, conversely, how a sound environment can support or "enable" health. In showing trends over time and presenting projections for the future it underscores newly emerging environmental health problems and indicates the type of local and national monitoring and assessment that would improve environmental health management.

The book's intended audience consists of decision-makers, community leaders, scientists and professionals in governmental and nongovernmental organizations who are interested in development issues. It is hoped that this book will inspire professionals working in a variety of development sectors - such as agriculture, industry, environment, aid and planning - and health professionals who wish to become more aware of environmental health issues.

The concept of the environmental cause-and-effect framework provides the book's structure. The first chapter explains the framework and introduces key issues discussed in this book. The basic driving forces behind environmental health problems, such as population growth, economic development and non-sustainable consumption, need to be addressed if we are to secure a healthy environment and sustainable development. Human activities lead to pressures on the environment from sewage, solid waste and pollution, that may eventually affect the quality or state of the environment. If exposed to unhealthy environmental conditions (state), people may experience health effects.

This framework accords with the way in which environmental health scientists have begun to extend their investigation of the environmental causes of ill health beyond the traditional focus on localized hazards to human health. This is because it is becoming increasingly accepted that many of those local hazards are the "downstream" products of large-scale environmental pollution and degradation that are linked to human-induced stresses driven by population growth, economic development and technological forces. Consequently, it is becoming evident that promotion and protection of human health may be undertaken more cost-effectively by implementing measures that limit "upstream" damage to the environment, even though such measures may take some time to yield results. Nevertheless, interventions to control individual exposures to the more downstream hazards may still be preferable if adverse health consequences arising from existing environmental degradation are acute. But in many cases, both approaches will be needed.

The chapters in this book reflect this holistic way of thinking by following the steps of the health-and-environment cause-and-effect framework shown schematically in Fig. 1.3 (see page 9). A more detailed account of this rationale can be found in Chapter 1.

This book is a contribution by WHO to the five-year follow-up to the Earth Summit. This anniversary provides an opportunity to assess the impact made by environmental health activities at local, national and global level during this period. The book systematically brings together quantitative data on health-and-environment linkages at the global level, with examples from regions and countries. Health-and-environment linkages were described in the 1972 WHO report, Health hazards of the human environment, and in the 1992 WHO report, Our planet, our health, but new information and new ways of considering health and environment issues have emerged, and form the basis of this book.

The programmes on Health and Environment at WHO had the main responsibility for the preparation of this book. Many other programmes at WHO headquarters and Regional Offices contributed text and illustrations. The report could not have been completed without the major efforts of a number of WHO staff members and key consultants. Special thanks are due also to the members of the Director-General's Council on the Earth Summit Action Programme for Health and Environment for their input.